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Superconducting optical system to scale up ‘brain-Inspired’ computing

11 Oct 2022

NIST-developed networks have tiny light sources at each neuron to broadcast to connections.

Scientists have long looked to the brain as an inspiration for designing computing systems. Some researchers have recently gone even further by making computer hardware with a brainlike structure. These “neuromorphic chips” have already shown great promise, but they have used conventional digital electronics, limiting their complexity and speed.

Now, a team at the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has demonstrated a solution to these communication challenges that may someday allow artificial neural systems to operate 100,000 times faster than the human brain.

As described in a new Nature Electronics paper, NIST researchers have achieved for the first time a circuit that behaves much like a biological synapse yet uses just single photons to transmit and receive signals. Such a feat is possible using superconducting single-photon detectors.

The computation in the NIST circuit occurs where a single-photon detector meets a superconducting circuit element called a Josephson junction, essentially a sandwich of superconducting materials separated by a thin insulating film.

If the current through the sandwich exceeds a certain threshold value, the Josephson junction begins to produce small voltage pulses called fluxons. Upon detecting a photon, the single-photon detector pushes the Josephson junction over this threshold and fluxons are accumulated as current in a superconducting loop. Researchers can tune the amount of current added to the loop per photon by applying a bias to one of the junctions, known as the synaptic weight.

‘Like biological synapses’

This behavior is similar to that of biological synapses. The stored current serves as a form of short-term memory, as it provides a record of how many times the neuron produced a spike in the near past. The duration of this memory is set by the time it takes for the electric current to decay in the superconducting loops, which the NIST team demonstrated can vary from hundreds of nanoseconds to milliseconds, and likely beyond.

This means the hardware could be matched to problems occurring at many different time scales — from high-speed industrial control systems to more leisurely conversations with humans. The ability to set different weights by changing the bias to the Josephson junctions permits a longer-term memory that can be used to make the networks programmable so that the same network could solve many different problems.

NIST says that this demonstration of superconducting single-photon synapses is “an important milestone on the path to realizing the team’s full vision of superconducting optoelectronic networks”. Yet the pursuit is far from complete. The team’s next milestone will be to combine these synapses with on-chip sources of light to demonstrate full superconducting optoelectronic neurons.

“We could use what we’ve demonstrated here to solve computational problems, but the scale would be limited,” NIST project leader Jeff Shainline said. “Our next goal is to combine this advance in superconducting electronics with semiconductor light sources. That will allow us to achieve communication between many more elements and solve large, consequential problems.”

The team has already demonstrated light sources that could be used in a full system, but further work is required to integrate all the components on a single chip. The synapses themselves could be improved by using detector materials that operate at higher temperatures than the present system, and the team is also exploring techniques to implement synaptic weighting in larger-scale neuromorphic chips.

The work was funded in part by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

ECOPTIKABTechChangchun Jiu Tian  Optoelectric Co.,Ltd.CeNing Optics Co LtdBerkeley Nucleonics CorporationIridian Spectral TechnologiesLASEROPTIK GmbH
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